Does the autonomic nervous system contribute to the initiation and progression of prostate cancer?
- PMID: 24141535
- PMCID: PMC3854038
- DOI: 10.1038/aja.2013.114
Does the autonomic nervous system contribute to the initiation and progression of prostate cancer?
Abstract
In the July 12 issue of Science magazine, researchers from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, the Durham VA Medical Centre and Duke University published an elegant study demonstrating that the sympathetic nervous system, acting through β2 and β3-adrenoceptors in the prostate, plays an important role in the initiation of prostate cancer, while the parasympathetic nervous system plays a role in the dissemination of tumour metastases via M1 muscarinic receptors. These findings are significant because they indicate that receptors associated with the autonomic nervous system may be viable targets for prostate cancer therapy.
Comment on
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Autonomic nerve development contributes to prostate cancer progression.Science. 2013 Jul 12;341(6142):1236361. doi: 10.1126/science.1236361. Science. 2013. PMID: 23846904
References
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- Rao J, Yang J, Liu Z, Wang L, Yin Z, et al. Hypothetic association between greater sympathetic activity and prostate cancer. Med Hypotheses. 2008;71:442–3. - PubMed
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- Thaker PH, Han LY, Kamat AA, Arevalo JM, Takahashi R, et al. Chronic stress promotes tumor growth and angiogenesis in a mouse model of ovarian carcinoma. Nat Med. 2006;12:939–44. - PubMed
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